No matter what data tells us, or doesn't tell us, always remember: "Climate" is what you expect. "Weather" is what you get. In the western US, they two don't always coincide on any given day. While a hotel on the centerline sounds comfy, I think I may do what Siegfried is going to do. Be ready to get on the road and drive if need be. The only way I'd consider a chartered flight is if the path of totality was completely over water or otherwise inaccessable. I'm putting a portable telescope/imaging setup in the fun car and planning on an adventure. On Fri, May 22, 2015 at 7:24 AM, Josephine Grahn <jograhn@gmail.com> wrote:
I love it! I COULD say, "that’s two data points out of perhaps 100 or so recorded", or I COULD say, “Due to Climate change, the last two data points may be most indicative” (but then we have a different sort of discussion taking off from there…), or, I COULD….. just wait and see what the 10 day looks like as the event approaches…. :) But thank you for starting out my day with a laugh!
On May 22, 2015, at 3:04 AM, Wiggins Patrick <paw@digis.net> wrote:
Here's the URL:
http://users.wirelessbeehive.com/~paw/keep/eclipsewx2014.jpg
On 22 May 2015, at 00:21, Wiggins Patrick <paw@digis.net> wrote:
When eclipse planning mobility is still a must.
Here are satellite images taken the last couple of years on the day and time the eclipse will happen. Note the location of the clouds.
patrick